欢迎书友访问966小说
首页Coming up for AirPART Ⅱ-4

PART Ⅱ-4

        For t seven years, from o ween, w I chiefly remember is fishing.

        Don’t t I did not’s only t ain to sill t Mott’s and    to tcripes, and got my first bicycle and a long time after long trousers. My first bike    up on t rests a eristic sigeen- up in t to trembling, because of tful tales Joe old me about old er, tle man,    like a    t, ake out and s to my surprise I did rat se t I migually Joe ter dunce, got t once a ayed someill een. My sed term I took a prize in aritid anotuff t ly ed    by time I een alking about scy. Fations for Joe and me in t I so ‘college’. ting round t I o be a sceaco be an aueer.

        But I    many memories ected ruck by t t t over t frig public sc flattens t into s or t of t it. It    so    to tayed till you een, just to s you    a prole, but sc you ed to get aiment of loyalty, no goofy feeling about tones (and t enougie and not even a sco yourself, because games    pulsory and as often as not you cut tball in braces, and t o play cricket in a belt, you rousers. t ump cricket o play in t made out of a bit of pag case and a po ball.

        But I remember t and boots, and tone in t ing blod le baker’s se    no a    sc t—you    if you    iquette t you o carve your name. And I got inky fingers and bit my nails and made darts out of peny stories and learo masturbate and cer, and bullied t of little illy Simeon, taker’s son, old e trick o send o so buy t did. All tamps, t- of striped paint—poor illy fell for all of t oernoon, putting ub and telling o lift    it    one really lived.

        to do in ter o borros—Mot Joe and me keep t y smelly to do a bit of ratting. Sometimes t us, sometimes told us to    and said rouble ts. Later in er s er, 1908 it must ing for er squirrels er on    birding. e    birds ’t t and it’s all rig tle beasts and sometimes    knock t dorample on toads o catcoads, ram till t. t’s    kno tangled in t ttom, and    black.

        But fis many a time to old Breook tiny carp and tenc of it, and once a urday afternoons. But after    bicycles arted fis seemed mroo cate.

        It’s queer, till    call myself a fis a fis long, and it’s ty years noo fifteeo    fisail uck clear in my memory. I    remember individual days and individual fis a coer t I ’t see a picture of if I s my eyes and te a book on tec ackle, it cost too muc of our t- money in t on ss and Lardy Busters. Very small kids generally fis pin,    to be muc you    make a pretty good ’s got no barb) by bending a needle in a dle flame o plait    it    as good as gut, and you    take a small fiser    to o allace’s ols didn’t tackle. And talogue t I picked up some ails about gut-substitute and gimp and Limerick s and disgers and Nottingecies.

        t o use. In our sy of meal very good. Geer. You o beg tt, tco dras or do enamena-mina-mo to decide    usually too pleasant about it. iff, and eels on y treacle-tin in your ill any ers hen say very humbly:

        ‘Please, Mr Gravitt, y’got ales today?’

        Generally : ‘! Gentles! Gentles in my s seen suc blow-flies in my shop?’

        o deal rip of leatick,    to enormous distances and smack a fly into paste. Sometimes you o go a ales, but as a rule    after you just as you were going:

        ‘‘Ere! Go round t find one or two if you looked careful.’

        You used to find ttle clusters every like a battlefield. Butc ors in tles live longer if you keep t.

        asp grubs are good, t’s o make ti t.     at nigurpentine do and plug up t day t t and take t urps missed took t t up all nig all toget very badly stung, but it y tanding by opc t bait tick t any s and just flick to and fro on t. But you ever get more t a time. Greenbottle flies, o catc bait for dace, especially on clear days. You    to put t take a    it’s a tickliso put a live he hook.

        God knoe you make by squeezie bread in a rag. te and e and paste . Boiled    bad for roacriped and smells like ao keep try to keep tty good for roacake a     out of a bun.

        Iarts) till mider I    often    a tin of les in my pocket. I s    it, but in t of forbidden teen ed going after girls, and from t fis t , t sticky afternoons in ting a predicates and subjunctives aive clauses, and all t’s in my mind is ter near Burford eir and to and fro. And terrific ruser tea, to Co to get in an ill summer evening, t splaser ing. And tcerally praying) t one of t before it got too dark. And t ’s es more’, and t five minutes more’, until in to o too a ligimes in t out to make a day of it ter and a bottle of lemonade, and fisig you’d eaten    of your bread paste, o cook t    river fis trout and salmon. ‘Nasty muddy t of all are t catcrous fiso see oernoons and    a rod    allo. On Sundays you o go for    and ton collar t sa I sa one. And sometimes in trout go sailing past. trout groo vast sizes in t tically never caug one of ttle-nosed blokes t you see muffled up in overcoats on camp-stools y-foot roac all seasons of to catcrout. I don’t blame t entirely, and still better I sa then.

        Of course ot my long trousers,    sc to firmation classes, told dirty stories, took to reading, and e mice, fretage stamps. But it’s al er- meadoance, and ter ajars stocks and latakia. Don’t mistake alking about. It’s not t I’m trying to put across any of t poetry of cuff. I kno’s all baloney. Old Porteous (a friend of mine, a retired scer, I’ll tell you about er) is great on try of cimes uff about it out of books. ordsime o say    no kids of rut kids aren’t in any ic, ttle animals, except t no animal is a quarter as selfis ied in meado a landscape, doesn’t give a damn for flo o eat,    kno from anot’s about as o poetry as a boy gets. A all t peculiar iy, t long ime stretd out in front of you and t wever you’re doing you could go on for ever.

        I tle boy, ter-coloured    except for a quiff in front. I don’t idealize my co be young again. Most of to care for    care if I never see a cricket ball again, and I    give you t of ss. But I’ve still got, I’ve al, but I’ve actually o go fis and forty-five and got tal about my c my oicular c tion    at its last kick. And fisypical of t civilization. As soon as you t don’t belong to tting all day under a ree beside a quiet pool—and being able to find a quiet pool to sit beside—belongs to time before tler. tenc    live in terror of time eating aspirins, going to tures, and    of tration camp.

        Does anyone go fis to catc trout-fise ers round Scotcels, a sort of snobbiscificial flies. But s or s aren’t poisoned ories ty tins and motor-bike tyres.

        My best fis some fis I never caug’s usual enough, I suppose.

        fourteen Faturn of some kind to old aker at Binfield        a good turn. One day a little o buy c me outside topped me in    of a bit of root, and only teeth, which were dark brown and very long.

        ‘ you?’

        ‘Yes.’

        ‘t you eo, you could bring your line and ry in t ty bream and ja t don’t you tell no one as I told you. And don’t you go for t any of t their backs.’

        oo muc Saturday afternoon I biked up to Binfield s full of les, and looked for old    t t time Binfield y for ten or ty years. Mr Farrel, t afford to live in it a or    let it.    of    to tting, ttles, tations o meadoo s it iful a    , I suppose, about Queen Aime by someone aly. If I    t a certain kick out of ion and t t used to go on t suc t for ever. As a boy I didn’t give eit old    finis surly, and got o so t     a lake, about a y yards across. It onis t age it astonis t fifty from London, you could ude. You felt as mucely round by trees, ed in ter. On td up at one end of tting among the bulrushes.

        t four to six in er. too, and t    sometimes o urn over and plunge    o ter. It rying to catcried every time I    tried t in t alive in a jam-jar, and even    of a bit of tin. But t bite, and in any case tackle I possessed. I never came back from t at least a dozen small bream. Sometimes in t te and to ter and    of all o be aloterly alo a quarter of a mile a old enougo kno it’s good to be alone occasionally. itrees all round you it o you, and notirred except ter and t, in t I    fisimes did I really go, I    more t ook up a    least. And sometimes oturned up, and sometimes o go it rained. You knohings happen.

        Oernoon t biting and I began to explore at t from Binfield    of an overfloer and to fig of jungle of blackberry busten boug rees. I struggled t for about fifty yards, and to anoted. It    more ty yards    over. But it er and immensely deep. I could see ten or fiftee doo it. I    for a bit, enjoying tten boggy smell, t almost made me jump out of my skin.

        It e     t glided across ter, and to ter on t as if a s fisood t breat anoter, and toget possibly tenc more probably carp. Bream or tene ted ream     been fotten. It’s a t s fotten some for years and decades and to monstrous sizes. tes t I c be a    a soul in t t me. Very likely it y years sinyoen its existence.

        ell, you    imagine . After a bit I couldn’t eveantalization of y fisoget rying for tes ackle I    as if it    go on fisiny bream. t of tomac as if I o be sick. I got on to my bike and    for a boy to rous fis—fis    bait you offered t ion of getting rong enougo s. I’d buy tackle t eal t of till. Some    imp and Number 5 les and paste and meal a carp mig. t Saturday afternoon I’d e bad try for them.

        But as it    back. One never does go back. I ole t of till or boug of salmon line or ry for t immediately afterurned up to prevent me, but if it    been t it hings happen.

        I kno you ting about t t medium- sized fis long, say) and t t it isn’t so. People tell lies about t and still more about t are    a I never caugried to catcive for lying. I tell you they were enormous.
请记住本书首发域名:966xs.com。966小说手机版阅读网址:wap.966xs.com